Page 12 Oaily Nebraskan Friday, February 13, 1987 MIL A By Charles Lieurance Senior Reporter You're slowly cruising through the spring nightf the fins on Ihe JL Chrysler gleaming, the top down, the dashboard glowing a sort of space- age green and some kind of primal chemistry going on between the driver's seat and the passenger seat, when the voice of the AM DJ bards, ". . . this is goin' out to Suzi from Ernie who knaws 'True Love's Ways'." Buddy Holly begins to croon and the chemistry in the Chrysler, at first just a purr, revs into adolescent fibrillation. But these were other days, tinted in amber and warm neon, when AM catered to teen-age infatuation the way shoe shine boys cater to movie stars. Gary Stone, program director for KLMS radio in Lincoln, said AM dedications still hold a fascination for their audience, even in the age of static-free, shimmering FM. "AM is still very romantic for dedi cations, and we get a fair amount on holidays like Valentine's Day," Stone said. "Most people who are dedicating grew up on classic AM." Classic AM And classic AM is what KLMS is all about, where you can still get the DJ to spin Frankie Valli's "My Eyes Adore You" or the Platters' 'The Great Pretender." FM, however, is not entirely cynical about love and romance. Tracy Johnson, KFRX program manager, said the station's most popular program is the Sunday dedication show. On the pro gram, DJ Dean Lambert acts as love's middle man from 10 p.m. to midnight, Longshoremen, "Walk the Plank" (Subterranean Records) It's no exaggeration to say that some of the oddest, most refreshing sounds in alternative music today emanate from Tony Bennett's heartthrob, San Francisco. Omaha natives and Subter ranean alumni the Muskrats are crea ting folk music that would make Peter, Paul and Mary jump the next Mandala out of town. Camper Van Beethoven, immigrants from Kedlands, Calif., blends pseudo-Slavic ethnic music and psychedelic folk. Bardo, S.F. native, performs a gypsyEddie Cochran syn thesis that boggles the neurons, and the White Fronts record blissful lessons in what you can do with a four-track recording device, a mind-altering sub stance and a fuzztone guitar pedal in the privacy of your own home. Longshoremen are basically free- form experimental poetry readers, doing rhythmic performance pieces with occasional, very primitive, instru- mental interjections. Despite the gender-specific name, two of the three Longshoremen are women Carol Deitweiler and Judy Gittelsohn, who provide rhythmic repetitions to lead HI Review Board m F'OS'rl ' ' , ' rftl I J. v X X r 1 fe rv .. . i s v" ' . ? I trying to get in as many of the 300 to 400 requests received during the week by phone and mail. "We chose Sunday night because it's & traditional "dead night for radio. Usually people stick to TV on Sundays," Stone said. "We hoped this would get people's attention off the tube. And it worked." Stone said the most-dedicated songs 4 AM is still very romantic for dedications and we get a fair amount on holidays like Valentine's Day. Stone have been love ballads like Madonna's "Crazy for You," Lionel Richie and Diana Ross's "Endless Love" and Chicago's "You're the Inspiration." Lambert, KFRX's voice of love, says it's his favorite time on the air. "For one thing, I get to talk, and I love that. For another, I'm not forced to stay within the usual radio format," Lambert said. Lambert said most of the dedications are guy to girl and "contrary to popular belief, most are over 18 years old." "A lot of the dedications are to or from girlfriends college kids left behind," Lambert said. "Plus we get a lot of mail from the prison." Lambert said he took a dedication . vocalist Dog's readings of Dave Swan's poetry pieces. The women act as a cross between the Supremes and Laurie Anderson. The pieces vacillate between the bizarre, the demented and the jubilant. The first work, "The Pit," is a paranoid rambling by a gas-station attendant that should keep those already half- paralyzed by urban angst out of the gas-station full-service lanes for good. Our narrator is a "greasy mechanic" who wants to hide in your trunk with the spare tire and follow you home. Dog's reading is frighteningly deadpan. "Locomotive" is the most tradition ally "musical" cut on the album, a sort of zydeco dance tune without the traditional instrumentation. Dog, Judy and Carol do a fine job of creating the rhythm and the Cajun mood sans accordion and washboard. If just plain demented fun isn't your idea of poetry reading, the Longshore- men turn in one menacing serious piece on the next side, a rereading of Nietzche's "Thus Spake Zarathustra" (the Reader's Digest condensed version) which Gary Blaise provides subdued harpsichord in the background. 't,"'"!rw,,X- '-""Ti-'', i"-Tt-r! V-rv Tfi , -aiiwMMBijrjik- , from one prisoner who wanted to tell his wife and family how much he'd screwed things up and how sorry he Brian MaryDaily Nebraskan Each piece is rendered with an ear for variety, so this experiment doesn't get as lifeless as similar stuff like the John Giorno Dial-a-Poet record series. As vinyl oddities go, this one actually holds up for more than one listening. Album courtesy of Pickles Records and Tapes Charles Lieurance Peter, Paul and Mary, "No Easy Walk to Freedom" (Gold Castle) In the mid-'GOs, folk music splintered into at least three distinct subgenres (even excluding such mutants as Dylan and Simon and Garfunkel). There were the traditionalists, the senior of whom was Pete Seger. There were the activists, typified by Joan Baez. There were the popsters, the most popular of which was Peter, Paul and Mary. "No Easy Walk to Freedom," PP&M's first new record in nine years, seems to be an attempt to emphasize the political over the popular. The cover photo shows Peter, Paul and Mary being arrested at the South African Embassy. This album, if I can be a bit cynical without casting aspersions on the See REVIEW DOAF1D on 13 O ft was. When he got out of prison a few months later on good behavior, the couple stayed together, "The guy bought me a box of doughnuts because he said the dedi cation saved his relationship," Lambert said. FM giveaways Some FM stations have traded in the simplicity of the love dedication for the upscale giveaway. KFMQ, for instance, is giving away a night on the town, flowers and cash for Valentine's Day. "There just isn't a great demand for the dedication here,". said KFMQ DJ BobAlleh."Theyjustservesuchasmall hi i ? i ' A- "3 cc;;-j t: r..:; td tr; ? tuti;: :.i izzzs ltA t!;s Scorchers tr.s rrcb- illy I fries was tcoh:, Conceri Elevicv ASer.a senev, zi forced rJsdf- cy r.frU, The v L 1 : L.t ; . : . i eft: ;re:XXUX- As a lir.i t:.iy sI'.-i-.vcJ r.r.re conesivcRcss than I have s.'rn rrccr.J!y.'i:-.cy ur.!-.hci the rr.v i - - j -i ' o'... a ..j iv. 1 1 i . . i: ::: :vci:.:-ir.,::;i-y.r.:ryi:.;;;J r:" t!.. :.:tsr.' tcfthsr.' ' t r. y t '.zcWzti r ;i::2"r:i.0.)Lf iuv,u!.!(:.7"c:-.i":;:'. tr. '' "' Tom LauderDaily Nebraskan portion of the audience basically just one person, It's not a big vehicle." "It makes more people mad than happy, because we can't get to all the dedications," Allen said. : As you're cruising through the spring night with the back-window brake light on your Ppntiac Fiero gleaming and the light-emitting diodes on your dashboard telling you your latitude, the time and how many inches are being worn off your tire tread, and you need somethig to pick up the chemistry a bit, there are still some DJs out there waiting for your call to transform the purr' to -fibrillation, X ; 1 la c j.xxr err o v! la t ' i ;. , r-j , t zzzgz cf th3 riiicr.ee r.v:r 'r with the thrt t;. :ys I: Ips to Lccst a shc;v. Ur..pcrtr.ct c?y, i;.tir.-.r,te set . tirts such ls the D;i:r,ct!ck v. ill net nsue tLcn rich cr f;.7.cu3 limited exrcrir.r.ca tf tl.cir 1. shcv.'s rr!ic SnsdiuU tltirtlillty n it: 2 t:.: .r cr 13 I: c:. . i S. .1 ..A I . - -J4 f . . cut c W1 1 . thitthcytl :-:;Mitv.:;c-tft:.iIr 1 hr.;.:?. t:.? ii tr; V I'- i I.- to a. t:T i :v v ? - V